It's nice to see an Original Six match-up competing for the honor to play for the Cup. These 2 franchises have a long history and this should be a great series.

Chicago Tribune wrote:

Originally posted: May 12, 2009Just say no to the Red Wings

Presented in high definition where available . . .

Listen up, Blackhawks fans: Stop asking for Detroit. Stop asking for the Hawks to meet the abominable Red Wings in the Western Conference Finals.

I know we’re all giddy from the Hawks’ inspiring accomplishments in scratching that seven-year playoff itch.

I know we’re drunk with enthusiasm over the way the Hawks came back time and again -- and that was just in the chaotic victory over Vancouver in Game 6 on Monday night that closed Canada for the 2009 postseason.

I know we’re carrying on as if Patrick The Hat Trick and Jonny T. Good are the Gretzky and Messier of our times, but sober up, people.

Asking for the dreaded Wings is asking for trouble.

I understand the thinking, believe me. If you love tradition and have a good hate working, then, gawd, yes, bring on the evil Wings.

If you love going old school with a couple Original Six teams to decide who gets to play for hockey’s Holy Grail, then, sure, bring on the vexing Wings.

If you somehow think it’s fitting or more satisfying or somesuch romantic cliche, then fine, bring on the abombinable Wings.

But if you’re smart, then you want Anaheim.

I’m not demeaning the Ducks here. They’re only two summers removed from their own Cup championship, but wise up, people. You don’t get style points for beating a team with a better record. You don’t earn extra credit for beating a team with a better pedigree. You don’t pick up a Get Out of Jail Free card for beating a defending champion.

You simply win or lose. You advance or cry.

They only remember the champ. Nobody cares about the path. It’s who, not how.

It’s easy to wrap yourself in the precociousness of the young Hawks. It’s invigorating to vicariously live the audacity of the kids who’ve committed to Denis Savard’s Indian. So, you talk big about wanting a shootout at the Joe Louis corral.

Stop, OK? Just stop. The truth is, the Ducks are the lesser team. That’s who you want.

Look, the beastly Wings are defending champions. Wipe the long-standing hate from your eyes and show a little respect for that.

The villainous Wings have won four Cups going back to 1997. The Hawks have won only three Cups in their history. In. Their. History.

Since the diabolic Wings started winning their four Cups again 12 years ago, the Hawks have won only two playoff series -- series, not Cups, do you hear me? -- and both of them came in the last month.

The Wings are a playoff-savvy team. The Hawks need a treat parent.

If you get the gruesome Wings, you lose many of the things that benefitted the Hawks in the first two rounds.

As long as Nicklas Lidstrom is in uniform, the Hawks won’t have the best defenseman on the ice the way they seemed to every shift through the first two rounds. Against Anaheim, I’d put Duncan Keith and Brent Seabrook and the new-look Brian Campbell up against Chris Pronger and the Niedermayer of your choice.

Whatever Dustin Byfuglien is learning to do in front of the net, Detroit annoyance Tomas Homstrom has made a career out of.

There’s this Johan Franzen guy who’s 6 foot, 3 inches and weighs 220 pounds and plays all over the forward line, and oh by the way, he’s Detroit’s leading playoff scorer. He has more points than Henrik Zetterberg, who along with Pavel Datsyuk, always seem to clinically destroy the Hawks.

That’s the thing about the Wings as a team. They’re clinical. They aren’t prone to doing the dumb things that Calgary and Vancouver pulled in the first two rounds. They aren’t likely to give the Hawks the extra power-play chances that Vancouver dropped in their laps in the last two games. (Vancouver’s Shane O’Brien has to get some votes as Hawks MVP.)

The Wings also are so poised and disciplined that they won’t let the Hawks get away with some of the mistakes that Calgary and Vancouver couldn’t take advantage of.

No question, the Hawks could beat the Wings. The Hawks could beat anybody. That’s the beauty and thrill of hockey. That’s why the Stanley Cup playoffs are so much better than the NBA. The outcome is in doubt in the NHL -- talk about a novel concept -- and the last minute of the game doesn’t take four hours as it bores us to death with fouls and free throws and fouls and free throws.

But anyway, the Hawks have the skill, speed and depth to beat the agonizing Wings. They certainly have more skill, speed and depth than the Wings have seen so far in the playoffs.

The Hawks also have a series-changing goalie, a Cup-winning goalie, in Nikolai Khabibulin. Anaheim has its Cup-winning goalie on the bench.

Interestingly, for all the wonderful things that Joel Quenneville has done with a young team, for all his strategic expertise, he would be the least decorated coach to face the Wings. Columbus’ Ken Hitchcock and Anaheim’s Randy Carlyle each won Cups as the guy behind the bench. Quenneville has jewelry as an assistant coach, but hasn’t guided his own team into a final.

You don’t want the pernicious Wings.

Of course, you really don’t want the Ducks, either. I mean, if you could choose, you’d want the Avalanche or the Islanders. But unfortunately, the rules don’t allow you to drag a cruddy team out of the NHL’s version of Lower Wacker and play them for the right to play for the Stanley Cup.

If you get the Ducks, there’s a better chance that more good things happen for the Hawks.

One thing that happens for sure is that the Hawks would get home-ice advantage. I realize the Hawks are a terrific road team, but you saw Game 6 on Monday, right? You heard or felt the anthem, right? You heard or felt the third period, right?

You’re telling me you’d rather face a team with a better record in their building in a Game 7 than in the United Thunderdome. Hel-lo?

Emotion and passion are wonderful parts of sports, especially in the playoffs, where everything is magnified, and that includes the big talk and the bravado. Thing is, you can’t lead with your heart. You have to use your brain.

I just read an article about the Blackhawks new promotion for buying tickets for home games. A Blackhawks player wipes an octopus of the ice with his stick and says it's time for a new tradition. (or somthing close to that)

Way to go Chicago Try to upset the most playoff expericenced team in the league before the series gets started.

Wings in 5.

_________________waiting for 2010 season.....

May 16th, 2009, 12:32 pm

TheRealWags

Modmin Dude

Joined: December 31st, 2004, 9:55 amPosts: 12278

Way to go Wings!!!! Great game!!! Now it's off to Chi-town to see about finishing them off!

Go Wings!

May 20th, 2009, 9:31 am

inheritedlionsfan

Team MVP

Joined: January 13th, 2006, 4:18 amPosts: 3347Location: Maryland

Man I couldn't watch the game last night cause I was studying for my last final exam. Heard it was great though. Keep it up Wings!!!

May 20th, 2009, 9:39 am

TheRealWags

Modmin Dude

Joined: December 31st, 2004, 9:55 amPosts: 12278

Freep wrote:

May 20, 2009

Chicago blows it; Stanley Cup finals inevitable

BY DREW SHARPFREE PRESS COLUMNIST

Is it possible to steal a home victory?

"I don't know if you could call it 'stealing,' but we were definitely fortunate," Nicklas Lidstrom said. "This was not our best effort. You could tell our legs were going late.

"And we got a break."

It'll be remembered as the break that broke Chicago's heart as well as its hopes of seriously challenging the Red Wings' sustained reign of Stanley Cup royalty.

This series is over. The Blackhawks blew it Tuesday night at Joe Louis Arena.

They had the Wings finally living up to the dates on their birth certificates. The leaden legs that eluded them in Game 1 lumbered their strides in Game 2. They were physically tired and emotionally taxed -- but Chicago's present was another ill-timed turnover that suddenly pumped rocket fuel into the Wings' weary limbs.

It elevated the blood pressure of those more predisposed to comfortable playoff resolutions, but overtime was exactly what these Western Conference finals required if its quality had any chance of catching up to its immense advanced hype.

This was Chicago's best chance to pilfer a road game and garner valuable confidence. But, as with any tight playoff game, fate hangs on a timely and, ultimately, deadly mistake. A turnover and, suddenly, the best offensive team in transition becomes a steamroller.

"I just went over and put the stick down (and) intercepted it," Samuelsson said. "I saw they went the other way. Great pass. ... Thank God it went in."

This was an evening of highly trumpeted televised season finales. Which celebrity had the best dance moves? Which novice possessed the best musical voice?

But this might serve as a series finale.

The series moves to Chicago. It'll be loud in the United Center. It'll be emotional considering it has been 14 years since the city last played host to the conference finals. But the Blackhawks could've made a stronger argument if they could've somehow snatched a little momentum from the Wings' possession.

"It's a bitter loss," Chicago coach Joel Quenneville said. "We did a lot of right things. Right now, it's a tough one."

It must certainly frustrate the Blackhawks that it's not the hired assassins killing them. There's no Marian Hossa, Pavel Datsyuk or Henrik Zetterberg among the goal-scorers. But Dan Cleary continued his assault with his fourth goal in three games. The Wings got a goal from Brian Rafalski. They're continually getting enough contributions from a variety of sources that they don't miss the big guns.

The Blackhawks looked a little less intimidated by their unusual surroundings than in Game 1. Chicago realized that open-ice warfare against the team that best articulated that battle plan would prove suicidal if you made a mistake. You can beat the Wings occasionally with a transitional game predicated on speed and puck possession. But the only chance at beating them in a best-of-seven series is chipping away as Anaheim did in the last round.

That opportunity was there, but the Wings stole a game they probably should have lost.